In speeches where Abe and Trump stressed their resolve to peacefully solve the North Korean crisis, Trump again seemed to praise Kim the dictator.

“We have great respect for many aspects of what they’re doing,” Trump said of North Korea. “But we have to get it together, we have to end nuclear weapons, ideally in all parts of the world.”

Trump has frequently and harshly criticized North Korea for its nuclear ambitions and ballistic missile tests, but often mixed in some light praise.

Trump previously said he’d be “honored” to talk to Kim, an honor he now looks likely to achieve.

He’s also expressed admiration for Kim’s leadership of North Korea, despite the fact that the regime runs labor camps that have been likened to Auschwitz in Nazi-controlled Europe.

“Not many 27-year-old men could go in and take over a regime… Say what you want, but that’s not easy – especially at that age,” said Trump to ABC News before his inauguration in January 2016.

“How many young guys – he was like 26 or 25 when his father died – take over these tough generals, and all of a sudden … he goes in, he takes over, and he’s the boss,” said Trump. “You gotta give him credit.”

But Trump has also called Kim a madman, irrational, imbalanced, a sick puppy, and even bestowed him his own nickname of “little rocket man.”

“Trump has a pragmatic approach to the foreign-policy issues that he sees as most important,” Yun Sun, a North Korea expert at the Stimson Center previously told Business Insider.

It appears now that Trump’s priority is denuclearizing the Korean Peninsula, and he doesn’t seem afraid to sympathize with Kim if it helps getting that job done.